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Isla Fisher
Birth at
3 February 1976
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Red-haired Isla Fisher is a wild cocktail of modesty and extravagance, closeness and friendliness, carelessness and high organization. This actress didn’t do much, but the roles she played became starring. The daughter of a Scot and an Englishwoman, Isla Fisher was born in Muslim Oman on February 3, 1976. When she was not yet a year old, her parents and four brothers moved to Australia. There she went to school and graduated from university. Isla is considered an Australian actress. As a teenager,
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Red-haired Isla Fisher is a wild cocktail of modesty and extravagance, closeness and friendliness, carelessness and high organization. This actress didn’t do much, but the roles she played became starring.
The daughter of a Scot and an Englishwoman, Isla Fisher was born in Muslim Oman on February 3, 1976. When she was not yet a year old, her parents and four brothers moved to Australia. There she went to school and graduated from university. Isla is considered an Australian actress.
As a teenager, Isla wrote with her mother and published two novels – “Bewitched” and “Seducated by fame”. Then, from 1994 to 1997, her acting career began. Fisher starred in
Home and on the Road It was very popular in Australia as well as in several commercials. Shannon Reed won an award from the Australian Film Academy.
On the big screens, the girl brought the role of Mary Jane in the film “Suby Doo” (2002). And for her role in “Uninvited Guests” (2005), Isla Fisher received the MTV film award as the most grandiose “breakthrough of the year”. In 2009, the box office picture “Shopaholic” was released, where the main role was played again by Isla. In 2010, she masterfully played the main character in the black comedy “Hands-feet for love.”
However, the actress surprises and pleases her fans not only with the game, but also with her personal life. For several years she dated the extravagant Sacha Baron Cohen, who is known for his "personality reproduction." In the end, in 2006, she married this eccentric, bore him two children and converted to Judaism.
Isla, or as she is called after the rite of Ayala, continues to act, is engaged in charity, plays tennis. In addition, she tries to contribute to the crazy antics of her husband, which she calls “career”. /